ICG CEO Sees Private Credit Boom With Unprecedented Debt Returns

Almost all the stars are aligned for private credit, thanks to factors including low defaults, limited refinancing activity and the absence of a recession, said Benoît Durteste, chief executive officer of Intermediate Capital Group Plc.

(Bloomberg) — Almost all the stars are aligned for private credit, thanks to factors including low defaults, limited refinancing activity and the absence of a recession, said Benoît Durteste, chief executive officer of Intermediate Capital Group Plc.

“It’s double-digit returns for senior debt right now — I’ve never seen that in my career,” the London-headquartered alternative asset manager’s CEO told Bloomberg Television’s Dani Burger at the IPEM private equity conference in Paris.

Durteste pushed back on a prediction by UBS Group AG strategists in June that defaults in the private credit market would peak at 9% to 10% in the first half of 2024.

“Not at all,” he said. “There’s no history of that, there’s no experience of that.” The average default rate is 2% or lower, and without a severe recession, debt portfolios wouldn’t be so impacted, he said.

On the buyout side, companies in the services sector remain compelling, while health-care firms may be more difficult but some areas are still attractive, Durteste said. There is renewed appetite for industrials, which had been out of favor, he added.

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Founded in 1989, ICG has more than 500 employees in offices across 16 countries, according to its website. The firm has $82.1 billion in assets under management as of June 30.

–With assistance from Dani Burger.

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